RRND Email Full Text (Scheduled)

  • Kazakhstan: Russian regime launches first rocket from repaired Baikonur launch pad

    Source: Reuters

    “Russia launched a Soyuz rocket from a repaired launch pad at its ​Baikonur cosmodrome in Kazakhstan on Sunday, restoring ‌its capability to fly to the International Space Station for the first time since the launch pad ​was damaged last year. At 1200 GMT, ​a Soyuz-2.1a rocket carrying the Progress MS-33 ⁠cargo spacecraft lifted off and was placed ​into orbit, Russia’s space agency said. The spacecraft ​is expected to dock with the International Space Station on March 24. The launch pad had been out of ​commission since it was badly damaged in November ​when a Soyuz MS-28 spacecraft with two Russian cosmonauts ‌and ⁠one NASA astronaut on board blasted off. No one was hurt and the crew safely reached the space station, but the incident deprived ​Russia of ​its sole ⁠means of sending crew or cargo back to the ISS for ​months.” (03/22/26)

    https://www.reuters.com/science/russia-launches-first-rocket-repaired-baikonur-launch-pad-2026-03-22/

  • Federal judge reverses Pentagon press restrictions

    Source: Politico

    “The Trump administration violated the Constitution when it sought to restrict press access to the Pentagon and limit what reporters could cover, a federal judge ruled Friday. U.S. District Judge Paul Friedman granted a request from The New York Times to void the Pentagon’s press credential policy on grounds it violated the First and Fifth Amendment, rejecting the government’s argument that the restrictions were needed to prevent the disclosure of classified information. … The ruling, which comes as journalists around the world seek information about the war in Iran, rolls back a highly aggressive attack on press freedom implemented last year by Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, a former Fox News host who has had a strained relationship with the media.” (03/20/26)

    https://archive.is/6842D

  • Czech Republic: Mass Prague rally hits Babis over democracy concerns

    Source: Deutsche Welle [German state media]

    “Tens of of thousands of people rallied in the Czech capital, Prague, on Saturday to oppose the policies of Prime Minister Andrej Babis and his coalition government, accusing it of what they called ‘arrogance of power.’ Organizers from the Million Moments for Democracy movement estimated that more than 200,000 people filled the Letna plain, though that figure has not been independently verified. The demonstrators accused Babis of steering the country away from democratic values and aligning with the pro-Russia policies of Hungary and Slovakia. … In addition to concerns over public media, state institutions, and foreign policy, demonstrators also warned against draft legislation they say resembles Russian-style restrictions on civil society.” (03/21/26)

    https://www.dw.com/en/mass-prague-rally-hits-babis-over-democracy-concerns/a-76470345

  • MI: Detroit moms rushing to “no strings attached” cash aid program

    Source: Fox News

    “Over 1,000 Detroit moms rushed to a ‘no-strings-attached’ cash aid program tailored to new and expectant mothers, the city’s mayor announced on Tuesday. ‘Seeing more than 1,000 Detroit mothers enrolling so quickly tells you everything: families are ready, and Detroit is delivering,’ Mayor Mary Sheffield said in a written statement. Detroit officials distributed around $1 million to more than 1,000 mothers as part of the city’s Rx Kids program, which launched the application process on Feb. 9. The cash assistance program is a statewide initiative that’s intended to issue $1,500 cash to new and expectant mothers in the Motor City as well as $500 per month after a child’s birth for at least six months. The program is considered the largest cash aid program for prenatal and infant care in the country.” (03/22/26)

    https://www.foxnews.com/media/detroit-moms-rushed-no-strings-attached-cash-aid-program-tailored-new-mothers

  • Canada: A secularism law some women say makes them “feel like outsiders” heads to top court

    Source: BBC News [UK State Media]

    “Since 2019, a secularism law in Quebec has barred some public sector workers, like judges, police officers and teachers, from wearing religious attire at work. Now, the country’s highest court is preparing to consider its future. Lisa Robicheau describes her life as ‘stuck between a rock and a hard place’. The 41-year-old single mother of two, who wears a hijab, works in Montreal’s English-language school system as a contract support worker for students with disabilities – a job she loves and where she is exempt from the current law. But Robicheau can’t help feeling anxious about her future and whether she will be able to continue working in a public school while being visibly Muslim in Quebec. The uncertainty has led her to enroll back in university, hoping to find a different job—or even leave the province.” (03/22/26)

    https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/ceqw5j5lx32o

  • Cuba: Power grid collapses for third time this month

    Source: National Public Radio [US state media]

    “Cuba’s power grid collapsed Saturday leaving the country without electricity for a third time in March as the communist government battles with a decaying infrastructure and a U.S.-imposed oil blockade. The Cuban Electric Union, which reports to the Ministry of Energy and Mines, announced a total blackout across the island without initially giving a cause for the outage. The union later said the blackout was caused by an unexpected failure of a generating unit at the Nuevitas thermoelectric plant in Camagüey province.” (03/22/26)

    https://www.npr.org/2026/03/22/nx-s1-5756288/cubas-power-grid-collapses

  • CA: Massive animal rescue operation seizes over 300 dogs and cats

    Source: SFGate

    “A large-scale animal rescue operation for hundreds of dogs and cats took place on Friday in Lake Hughes, roughly 60 miles north of Los Angeles. The Los Angeles County Department of Animal Care and Control served a search warrant at a property on 266th Street West in Lake Hughes, following reports of a violation of animal welfare laws. The operation involved over 70 people, and officials initially estimated that over 700 animals were located on the property in need of rescue, according to an Instagram post by DACC Friday. The post said the operation could be the largest of its kind to have taken place in the U.S., but in an update, that number was revised down to about 250 dogs and 66 cats.\” (03/21/26)

    https://www.sfgate.com/bayarea/article/california-animal-rescue-operation-22089455.php

  • SCOTUS Revives Suit From Evangelical Christian Challenging Restrictions on Demonstrations

    Source: US News & World Report

    “The Supreme Court on Friday revived a lawsuit from an evangelical Christian barred from demonstrating in Mississippi after authorities say he shouted insults at people over a loudspeaker. The high court unanimously ruled in the case of Gabriel Olivier, who says his religious and free speech rights were violated when he was arrested for refusing to move his preaching away from a suburban amphitheater. The city said he had shouted insults like ‘whores,’ ‘Jezebel’ and ‘nasty’ at people, sometimes holding signs showing aborted fetuses. Olivier wanted to challenge the law as an unconstitutional restriction on free speech, but lower courts stopped him from suing because he’d been convicted of breaking it. A Supreme Court case from the 1990s found people can’t use civil lawsuits to undermine criminal convictions. But the justices found that doesn’t stop Olivier from suing because he only wants to block future enforcement.” (03/20/26)

    https://www.usnews.com/news/us/articles/2026-03-20/supreme-court-revives-suit-from-evangelical-christian-challenging-restrictions-on-demonstrations


  • Trump Wants to Destroy Anthropic Because It Is Doing Congress’s Job of Preventing Him from Abusing AI

    Source: The UnPopulist
    by Adam Conner

    “Over the last two weeks, the Department of Defense has initiated two wars: one against a nation with a long history of conflict with the United States; the other against one of the fastest-growing new companies in American history: Anthropic, the frontier artificial intelligence lab behind the popular Claude model. The DOD has effectively declared both Iran and Anthropic to be enemies of America, and though the weapons the DOD is using in each conflict differ dramatically — explosive missiles versus bureaucratic legal statutes — the department has made clear in both cases that its objective is to severely damage, if not totally destroy, the enemy. … Why this fight started and how the government has chosen to wage it are two separate questions, and conflating them is one of the major mistakes most coverage of this conflict has made.” (03/21/26)

    https://www.theunpopulist.net/p/trump-wants-to-destroy-anthropic

  • Autarky: Terrible at Political Scale, But Great as Individual Self-Defense

    Source: Garrison Center
    by Thomas L Knapp

    “The war on Iran is temporarily producing the same result that actual US ‘energy independence’ — usually promoted as proposed autarky in the production/sale of oil — would deliver without ‘armies crossing borders.’ Almost all oil and gas produced in the US comes from ‘tight formation production’ — horizontally drilled wells and hydraulic fracturing (‘fracking’) to extract the stuff from shale . That’s more expensive than just drilling a vertical well and pumping the black gold out, as is done in the Middle East. That’s a ‘competitive disadvantage’ for US oil companies. The only way for US oil production to be profitable is for the price per barrel to be kept artificially high through ‘protectionist’ measures … or war. The US producers can only profit by increasing YOUR costs. At the level of the individual American, on the other hand, a certain amount of ‘energy independence’ — autarky! — makes a good deal of sense.” (03/21/26)

    https://thegarrisoncenter.org/archives/20457

  • Immigration Restrictions Restrict Americans’ Liberties

    Source: Liberalism.org
    by Ilya Somin

    “The biggest victims of immigration restrictions are the would-be migrants, who are consigned to a lifetime of poverty and oppression simply because they were born in the wrong place, to the wrong parents. But the horrific experience of the second Trump administration highlights how restrictionism also poses a grave threat to the liberty and welfare of native-born citizens. While some of the harms caused to natives are specific to the policies of this administration, many are inherent in the very nature of exclusion and deportation, and they occur even under more conventional presidents. The ultimate solution is to end all or most immigration restrictions, or at least to severely curb them.” (903/20/26)

    https://www.liberalism.org/p/immigration-restrictions-restrict-americans-liberties

  • The Palestine Context

    Source: Free Association
    by Sheldon Richman

    “Much turmoil in the Middle East today is attributable to this overlooked fact: Jewish European descendants of people who had freely chosen to leave ancient Judea/Palestine established a project, Zionism, in the late 19th and early 20th century with the intention of displacing the descendants of Judeans who had chosen to stay. This is a dispute, in other words, between Canaanites who remained — from whom the Palestinian Muslims and Christians descended — and the Canaanites who willingly departed — from whom the Ashkenazi Jews descended. … For both Jewish and Christian Zionists, the alleged Roman exile of the Jews from Judea in the first century CE is a key part of the Zionist property claim, on behalf of all Jews the world over, to the land of Israel. But exile did not happen.” (03/20/26)

    https://sheldonrichman.substack.com/p/tgif-the-palestine-context

  • Bluesky raises $100 million but faces a messy reality

    Source: Washington Post
    by Megan McArdle

    “To partisans behind Bluesky, it must have seemed like a gift from the gods when Elon Musk bought Twitter. In short order he changed its name to X, shifted its moderation policies sharply to the right and sent millions of internet refugees searching for a new home. But as the ancients knew, gifts of the gods often come with strings attached. In the two years since Bluesky opened to all comers, the social media app has gained 43 million users, an amazing feat for a company with fewer than 50 full-time employees. That growth got a huge boost from Musk’s antics in the lead-up to the 2024 election, which endowed Bluesky with a base of devoted users — users who skewed heavily progressive and brought with them cancel culture tactics that had flourished on X. Those users are now the platform’s biggest barrier to growth.” (03/22/26)

    https://archive.is/qMWRN

  • You Can’t Make People Cheer For Your Wars After Committing A Live-Streamed Genocide

    Source: Caitlin Johnstone, Rogue Journalist
    by Caitlin Johnstone

    “I saw a clip of Fox News war propagandist Sean Hannity solemnly reading a tweet by Atlantic Council fellow Jamie Metzl which said, ‘It is profoundly disturbing that a growing segment of the far left appears to be almost rooting for Hamas, Hezbollah, the Iranian regime, and other forces fundamentally opposed to the US and our allies. This seems to reflect a corrosive strain of anti-Americanism dressed up in post-colonial theory that risks blinding us to the moral realities of our world and the nature of our adversaries.’ These assholes really thought they could commit a genocide in full view of the entire world for years and then expect everyone cheer for them to win. Of course we’re seeing more ‘anti-Americanism.’ You don’t get to commit horrific atrocities year after year and then cry when the world starts to hate you.” (03/21/26)

    https://caitlinjohnstone.com.au/2026/03/21/you-cant-make-people-cheer-for-your-wars-after-committing-a-live-streamed-genocide-and-other-notes/

  • Attacking Iran’s Power Plants Would Be Despicable

    Source: Eunomia
    by Daniel Larison

    “Threatening to damage or destroy power generation for the entire country is outrageous. If the U.S. does this, it will be inflicting collective punishment on the civilian population on a massive scale. Attacking Iran’s power plants would be comparable to Russian attacks on Ukraine’s power grid, and it would be just as despicable.” (03/21/26)

    https://daniellarison.substack.com/p/attacking-irans-power-plants-would

  • Why Iran won’t collapse

    Source: Unherd
    by Christopher de Ballaigue

    “Not a day passes without an official warning of threats to the country’s territorial integrity: code for foreign-funded agitations among the country’s Kurdish, Baluch and Arab minorities. But Iran isn’t in danger of falling apart. It isn’t Afghanistan or Iraq, modern confections of mutually antagonistic groups. Rather, it has a natural coherence based on the supremacy of the Persian language; its geographically logical homeland on the Persian plateau, ringed by seas and mountains; and the Shia Islam to which most Iranians adhere. For centuries, indeed, these strengths have enabled Iran to survive invasions, violent changes of dynasty, famines, tribal uprisings, regicides and years of meddling by imperial Britain and Russia — not to mention the 1979 revolution itself. They will offset the centrifugal forces that Trump seems intent on stimulating. For the true danger to Iran is not disintegration, but implosion.” (03/21/26)

    https://archive.is/R8Mvx

  • Let Iran Be Someone Else’s Problem

    Source: The American Conservative
    by Benjamin H Friedman

    “The United States is not going to win this war with Iran. The good news is that we do not need to. There was no good reason for the Israeli–U.S. attack in the first place, and American security does not require us to win anything new from Tehran—not the regime change President Donald Trump fantasizes about, not the militarily-crippled Iran his defense secretary describes as the goal, not even the nuclear deal Washington might have had before it chose war. The United States can simply stop. It can declare a phony victory and even call it the ‘unconditional surrender’ Trump demands.” (03/21/26)

    https://www.theamericanconservative.com/let-iran-be-someone-elses-problem/

  • A year after coming into power, Syria’s ruler faces his defining test in Lebanon

    Source: New York Post
    by Dan Perry

    “Since Ahmed al-Sharaa came to power in Damascus last January, a question has hovered in the air: Has Syria truly changed, or merely changed hands Seeking sanctions relief, investment and a measure of international legitimacy, the new leadership, despite its past association with Al Qaeda, has signaled moderation. The symbols of the old regime are gone. The suffocating omnipresence of the Assad state has receded. Cafes have reopened, checkpoints have thinned and Syrians speak more freely. Yes, there have been killings of members of the Druze and the formerly dominant Alawite minorities, which the government denies direct involvement in. But even this mixed picture is no small achievement. The Russia- and Iran-backed Assad regime was not simply authoritarian; it was claustrophobic, built on surveillance, coercion and inherited power. Its collapse created space.” (03/21/26)

    https://nypost.com/2026/03/21/opinion/syrian-leader-ahmed-al-sharaa-is-tested-with-situation-in-lebanon/

  • Trump Erupts in Fury Over His War Failures — and Exposes a Big Weakness

    Source: The New Republi
    by Greg Sargent

    “His rage at NATO is actually an admission that he needs our allies’ help — and that he wants somebody to blame as his war goes from bad to worse.” (03/21/26)

    https://newrepublic.com/article/208047/trump-war-failures-exposes-weakness

  • The Iran War Is What Trumpism Looks Like

    Source: The Dispatch
    by Jonah Goldberg

    “The idea that Trump’s war on Iran is a betrayal of ‘True Trumpism’ is the last gasp of people who told themselves that Trumpism was an ideology. And it’s embarrassing. I don’t agree with Trump on much, but he is incandescently, blazingly, irrefutably correct when he says ‘I think that MAGA is Trump.’ … Whether you call it MAGA or America First or Trumpism, he determines what it is. And that has been true from the beginning. If you sincerely thought otherwise, the joke is on you.” (03/20/26)

    https://archive.is/dKVPF

  • Defense Spending in FY 2026 Could Top $1.2 Trillion

    Source: Exiled Policy
    by Jason Pye

    “Congress should not treat this supplemental as routine. It’s not. A $200 billion request tied to an open-ended conflict demands more than a simple funding vote. It requires a clear endpoint. Without that, lawmakers are writing a blank check for a war without an endgame, financed through additional borrowing at a time of already elevated deficits. And let’s be clear. If this war expands and boots are put on the ground, the fiscal cost will grow beyond $200 billion. Service members will be killed or wounded, adding to the $3 trillion that the federal government will spend on veterans over the next ten years.” (03/21/26)

    https://exiledpolicy.substack.com/p/defense-spending-in-fy-2026-could

  • Goodness Exists, Though You’d Never Know It From the Corporate Media

    Source: Town Hall
    by Mark Lewis

    “One of the first things I do every morning, even before I get out of bed, is check the news to discover if something good happened while I was asleep. I rarely find any such news. Just about all that is reported is crime, war, hatred, Democrats, Washington, D.C., California, New York City, the Middle East, Congress, China, Trump is Hitler, transgenderism, promiscuity and decadence, ad nauseam, ad infinitum. Every time I see a picture of Gavin Newsom, AOC, Nancy Pelosi, or Chuck Schumer, I want to puke. And since I’m only allowed 1,000 words for this article and want to say other things, I’ll leave it at that, and let the reader add to the list of barbaric and barfable objects as he/she wishes. But I don’t really wonder why I’m so cynical and have chronic depression. However, this morning, I got a boost in the other direction.” (03/21/26)

    https://townhall.com/columnists/marklewis/2026/03/22/goodness-exists-though-youd-never-know-it-from-the-corporate-media-n2673152

  • Maintaining principle in a time of polarization

    Source: Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression
    by Robert Corn-Revere

    “[I]f I had to choose an aphorism that sums up the state of the world today, I think I would have to go with Mark Twain. This one may be apocryphal as well, but Twain (supposedly) wrote, ‘Sometimes I wonder whether the world is being run by smart people who are putting us on or by imbeciles who really mean it.’ You can never go wrong with Twain, even if he didn’t actually write that line. There are plenty more where that came from. Here’s one he did write: ‘Suppose I were an idiot. Now, suppose I were a member of Congress. But I repeat myself.'” (03/20/26)

    https://www.fire.org/news/maintaining-principle-time-polarization

  • You Don’t Have to Love Afroman to Like Police Accountability

    Source: Mother Jones
    by Alex Nguyen

    “He kidded with Trump. He made homophobic jokes. That’s not why cops terrorized his family.” (03/20/26)

    https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2026/03/afroman-defamation-trial-sheriff-police-video-court-victory/

  • Brother, can you spare a dime?

    Source: The Price of Liberty
    by Nathan Barton

    “From the Rapid City Regional Airport in the Black Hills of South Dakota, we have a ‘NextDoor’ posting. We are reminded that (courtesy of Congressional wrangling and other factors), DHS has not been funded. So your friendly airport trolls in TSA get-up are not getting paid. So, the poster tells us, travelers in and out of the airport are asked to drop a few dimes (or dollars) into tip baskets to give a little help to the unpaid TSA agents for pawing through your luggage, your carry-on, powering up your laptop, making you take your belt buckle and shoes off, and wanding you so that you can fly to visit Aunt Ginnie in Seattle or Houston. Right.” (03/20/26)

    https://thepriceofliberty.org/2026/03/20/brother-can-you-spare-a-dime/

  • In a rethink of aid, motivation over mercy

    Source: Christian Science Monitor
    by staff

    “What’s in a name? For global aid groups hit hard last year when the world’s largest donor – the United States – slashed its humanitarian and development budget, a name change can bring a refreshing change in how to view poor, unwell, and homeless people. On March 18, Mercy Corps, which once directly helped about 37 million people in 35 countries, announced it would soon call itself Prosper Global, after a major downsizing of the Oregon-based organization. ‘We believe strongly that what these communities need is prosperity, not mercy,’ chief development officer Mary Stata told Axios. The rebranding reflects a view that ‘participants’ in programs are leaders, not ‘passive recipients of humanitarian aid,’ as Ms. Stata explained.” (03/20/26)

    https://www.csmonitor.com/Editorials/the-monitors-view/2026/0320/In-a-rethink-of-aid-motivation-over-mercy

  • Trump Himself Is the Trump Movement’s Iraq War

    Source: Gideon’s Substack
    by Noah Millman

    “As the Iran War has metastasized, a number of conservative intellectuals who strongly supported President Trump have started jumping ship. … A common thread is the comparison of the Iran war to George W. Bush’s war on Iraq, and a belief that, by pursuing a similar war of choice for regime change in the Middle East, Trump is betraying the intellectual foundations and the clear and specific policy goals of the movement he started. I rejoice when any public intellectual admits error, something that happens far less often than it ought to do. But I’m not sure they’ve identified their error correctly, because their analogy isn’t quite right. The Iran War isn’t the right event to analogize to the Iraq War. Rather, Trump himself, and the whole idea of using him as a vehicle for transforming America from the top down, is what is analogous to the Iraq War, and was from the beginning.” (03/20/26)

    https://gideons.substack.com/p/trump-himself-is-the-trump-movements

  • This Is a Lawless War

    Source: The Dispatch
    by Kevin D Williamson

    “The case against the Iran war is not the $200 billion that Secretary of Don’t You Dare Call It a War Pete Hegseth is asking for to fund U.S. operations in Iran. … Nor should we be persuaded by sentimentality about the loss of the lives of U.S. troops. … the entire military enterprise is based on the assumption that lives will be lost. … The case against this war is that it is illegal — whatever Secretary Jägerbomb has to say about it, this is a war, and it is being conducted with no congressional authorization in a haphazard, chaotic, ad hoc way by a president who is profoundly corrupt, nearly 80 years old, and unable to write an ordinary English sentence, surrounded by a constellation of grifters, addicts, and incompetents unrivaled by anything in Washington since the days of Franklin Pierce.” (03/20/26)

    https://archive.is/uAmp5

  • Grand Delusion

    Source: Unpopular Front
    by John Ganz

    “There is a word for being perpetually behind. A little slow. Not quick on the uptake. As a society, we have largely decided that it’s not one that civilized people should use: it’s cruel and denigrates the genuinely vulnerable among us. But what else can you call it when it has only just dawned on certain people that something might be a little off with this Trump guy?” (03/20/26)

    https://www.unpopularfront.news/p/grand-delusion

  • What Cognitive Science Tells Us About AI Warfare

    Source: Persuasion
    by Tim Requarth

    “In the intricate standoff between the Pentagon and Anthropic over the use of AI in weaponry, it was easy to be distracted by the strange bedfellows-aspect of the struggle – with OpenAI becoming a willing partner of the Pentagon even while Anthropic established itself as a darling of the #Resistance. But, more importantly, the standoff represents a significant turn of the wheel in how the debate around AI has entered into cultural space. It’s no longer Big Tech behemoths one-upping each other with upgrades. It’s about the vibes, man. And the future of AI may well be a kind of extended ELIZA effect — with consumers and contractors choosing between different AIs sort of as if they were sports teams, with the competing AIs corresponding to different sides in the culture wars.” (03/20/26)

    https://www.persuasion.community/p/ai-is-about-the-vibes-now

  • FCC Chair Carr’s Threats to Punish Broadcasters Are Unconstitutional

    Source: Electronic Frontier Foundation
    by David Greene

    “EFF joined other digital rights and civil liberties organizations in calling out the unconstitutionality of Federal Communications Commission chair Brendan Carr’s recent threats to punish broadcasters for airing statements he disagrees with. Carr’s recent threats, like his past threats, are unconstitutional efforts to coerce news coverage that favors President Donald Trump. He wrongly claims that the FCC’s ‘public interest’ standard allows him and the commission to revoke the licenses of broadcasters who publish news that is unflattering to the government is anathema to our country’s core constitutional values.” (03/20/26)

    https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2026/03/fcc-chair-carrs-threats-punish-broadcasters-are-unconstitutional

  • The World At Large Has Eyes

    Source: David Friedman’s Substack
    by David Friedman

    “Current communication technology is often immediately public, as in that example. An email message is private when it is sent but copies remain in the possession of sender, receiver, and possibly others, who may be compelled to release them if sender, receiver, or the employer of either becomes involved in a law suit or criminal prosecution. What are the consequences? One is to make communication more difficult; if you are corresponding via a public medium, arguing with someone on Facebook, it is prudent to avoid making any argument that could be quoted out of context to make you look bad. If you don’t you are likely to regret it. You may even find it prudent to avoid arguing for unpopular positions that you believe in …. Another effect is to make company executives more guarded in internal correspondence.” (03/20/26)

    https://daviddfriedman.substack.com/p/the-world-at-large-has-eyes

  • TN: State Election Bill Could Change Everything

    Source: The Pamphleteer
    by Davis Hunt

    “Much hay has been made of voting laws in Tennessee and across the country lately. You’ve probably heard about the SAVE Act at the federal level, and maybe some proposed laws at the state level too. The Banner wrote about some of the proposals at the state-level yesterday, but focusing so narrowly on ‘disparate impact’ type bills, they missed the Big Kahuna. There’s a proposal moving through the General Assembly right now that could change how local elections work in Nashville. The bill, sponsored by Scott Cepicky in the House and Joey Hensley in the Senate, would move the date of city elections to line up with the August primary or November general election. In other words, the off-cycle August 2027 Metro elections would get pushed to November 2028, landing on the same ballot as the presidential race every four years.” (03/20/26)

    https://pamphleteer.co/newsletter/state-election-bill-could-change-everything/

  • A Meeting of Minds

    Source: Law & Liberty
    by Henry T Edmonson III

    “It is a great tribute to the profundity of Flannery O’Connor’s work that it continues to generate quality secondary literature many years after her death. Lately the conversation has taken a philosophical turn, exploring O’Connor’s relevance to some of the defining debates within modern philosophy. An excellent example of this kind of work is Ann Hartle’s Flannery O’Connor and Blaise Pascal: Recovering the Incarnation for the Modern Mind.” (03/20/26)

    https://lawliberty.org/book-review/a-meeting-of-minds/

  • Israel accusing Iran of lawbreaking is the height of hypocrisy

    Source: Responsible Statecraft
    by Sarah Leah Whitson

    “After years of flouting the UN and Geneva Conventions Israel suddenly has an attack of legal propriety now that it is on the receiving end.” (03/20/26)

    https://responsiblestatecraft.org/israel-iran-bombing/

  • A War Against Our Own Values

    Source: The Weekly Dish
    by Andrew Sullivan

    “Why Trump’s unprovoked aggression breaks almost every rule of a just war.” (03/20/26)

    https://andrewsullivan.substack.com/p/a-war-against-our-own-values-8e6

  • We’d Be Winning This War if It Weren’t for Your Coverage

    Source: The Atlantic
    by Alexandra Petri

    “Dear Media: There is no other way of putting this. The Fake News’s contumacious insistence on reporting what is actually happening in Iran rather than what Donald Trump would prefer was happening is setting back the war effort. So we at the FCC would like to provide you with some suggestions for updating your coverage. This is not a threat. However, please remember that we are in the process of consolidating every media company under the control of a man with a named boat who hates all the programming and has preemptively given Donald Trump his kidney, ‘just in case it ever comes in handy.’ … Clap! Why don’t you clap?” (03/20/26)

    https://archive.is/AaRQm